
Abigail is a Juris Doctor candidate at Syracuse University College of Law. She conducts legal research and writing for the firm on a variety of First Amendment issues and plays an integral role in case strategy through legal analysis, issue development, and the evaluation of novel and complex constitutional arguments. Her current work involves researching First Amendment jurisprudence in the context of judicial ethics. Her research experience also encompasses litigation and governance matters in health care, as well as patents, technology transfer, and institutional partnerships in higher education. Abigail's research was recently selected for publication in the Journal of Science and Technology at Syracuse Law, entitled, "The Restricted Section: Public Libraries, Artificial Intelligence, and Intellectual Freedom."
At Syracuse Law, Abigail serves in leadership and editorial roles in Phi Alpha Delta, the Worldwide Innovation Technology & Entrepreneurship Club, the Journal of Science and Technology, and the Syracuse AI and Law Society. Prior to her legal studies, she worked in talent acquisition within the technology sector, focusing on roles in IT, engineering, machine learning, and data science. Originally from Dallas, Texas (she knows good tacos and salsa), she spent several years in Shreveport, Louisiana before moving to Syracuse. When Abigail is not busy with her 379 extracurricular activities and being an absolute censorship slayer (don’t let the pearls fool you), her gentler side is at home tending to her husband, Ben, and their fur children - a cat, Magma, and their two dogs, Mithril and Obsidian.
